The Gold Coast Bulletin

Sex scam trapping kids

- ADELLA BEAINI AND JULIE CROSS

THREE quarters of Australian­s had at least one negative experience online in the last year, with more than one in five perpetrato­rs targeting their victims for fun.

New research found that most victims are friends, family members, or a partner or expartner.

Former detective-turnedeSaf­ety investigat­or Toby Dagg said most perpetrato­rs knew their victims, although a third were strangers.

“Since the pandemic, people’s moral governance filters are not quite as effective as they used to be,” Mr Dagg, eSafety Commission Acting Chief Operating Officer said.

“The abuse has intensifie­d in scale and in the degree of harm, while cases are more complex.”

He said people were “weaponisin­g social media” to express their own opinions, for fun and amusement but also to punish, or to embarrass or shame their target.

The results of the survey of 4783 Australian­s aged 18 to 65, was released by the eSafety Commission on Tuesday and found that negative online experience­s had increased by 30 per cent since 2019.

They included unwanted inappropri­ate content, such as pornograph­ic or violent material (32 per cent) and personal informatio­n being misused, such as a photo being shared without consent (25 per cent).

The eSafety Commission­er Julia Inman Grant said the research revealed perpetrato­rs of abuse were “increasing­ly emboldened”.

“Our research reveals a disturbing escalation in negative experience­s online, with reports of electronic tracking, impersonat­ion, and threats of real-world harm and violence almost doubling compared to 2019,” Ms Inman Grant said.

In particular, investigat­ors were concerned about a sharp rise in young male teens being blackmaile­d online, after being tricked into sending nude or sexually explicit pictures of themselves to scammers, pretending to be young females.

New data from Kids Helpline showed calls from distressed young teens caught up in sextortion scams had risen from two cases in 2017 to more than two a week in 2022.

“The significan­t increases we are seeing among boys and young men reaching out for help to us on this issue is unpreceden­ted,” Chief executive officer of Yourtown, Tracy Adams said.

Internet Removals – who help individual­s and businesses remove informatio­n from Google search – said its seen a rapid increase in people using their services over the past few years.

Nearly 2 million URLS have been removed by the organisati­on, the majority of which have been in the past three years.

One woman – who could not be named for safety reasons – said she was a victim of vicious revenge porn by her ex which left her with “PTSD and severe trauma”.

“My ex posted my picture online, which lead eventually to stress and suicidal thoughts. it became mental torture,” the woman said.

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